Luigi Fabbri  | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Born | 23 December 1877 | 
| Died | 24 June 1935 Montevideo, Uruguay  | 
| Education | University of Macerata | 
| Occupation(s) | Writer, anarchist activist | 
| Spouse | Bianca Sbriccoli | 
| Children | Luce and Vero | 
Luigi Fabbri (1877–1935) was an Italian anarchist, writer, and educator, who was charged with defeatism during World War I. He was the father of Luce Fabbri.
Selected works
- Life of Malatesta, translated by Adam Wight (originally published 1936). This book was published again with expanded content in 1945.
 - Malatesta: L'Uomo e il Pensiero
 - Letters to a Woman on Anarchy, 1905
 - Workers' Organisation and Anarchy, 1906 pamphlet
 - Anarchist Organisation, 1907 pamphlet
 - The School and the Revolution, 1912
 - Letters to a Socialist, 1913
 - The Aware Generation, 1913
 - Bourgeois Influences on Anarchism, 1914
 - Dictatorship and Revolution, 1921
 - Preventive Counter-revolution, 1922
 
Further reading
- Ferretti, Federico (2016). "Reading Reclus between Italy and South America: translations of geography and anarchism in the work of Luce and Luigi Fabbri" (PDF). Journal of Historical Geography. 53: 75–85. doi:10.1016/j.jhg.2016.05.017.
 - Fabbri, Luce (1939). "Notes on the life of Luigi Fabbri". Social Studies. Montevideo. X (14).
 - Fedeli, Ugo (1948). Luigi Fabbri. Turin: Anarchist publishing group.
 - Santarelli, Enzo (1976). "Luigi Fabbri". In Andreucci, F.; Detti, T. (eds.). Biographical dictionary of the Italian workers' movement. Vol. II. Rome: Editori Riuniti.
 - Lipparoni, Nora (1979). The origins of fascism in Luigi Fabbri's thought. Fabriano: EPC.
 - Saints Faithful (2006). Luigi Fabbri. A libertarian between Bolshevism and fascism. Pisa: BFS. ISBN 978-88-89413-09-8.
 - Lamendola, Francesco. Remembering Luigi Fabbri.
 - Lane, A. T. (1995). Biographical Dictionary of European Labor Leaders. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-26456-6.
 
External links
 Works related to Fabbri in Italian and English at Wikisource- Luigi Fabbri Papers at the International Institute of Social History
 
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